Escape Wheel
The escape wheel is the toothed wheel at the end of the gear train. The pallet fork locks and releases it beat by beat, turning the mainspring's continuous power into the regulated steps that drive the hands. It is the gateway to timekeeping in a mechanical watch.
At a glance
- Place in the train
- Last wheel, feeds the escapement
- Works with
- Pallet fork
- Job
- Divides power into regular steps
As the mainspring unwinds, a continuous flow of power runs through the gear train. If that flow reached the hands unchecked, the watch would empty itself in seconds. The escape wheel is where the flow is stopped and let go: every beat, it breaks the energy into measured steps.
Its role in the escapement
The escape wheel never works alone; it is one of the three parts of the escapement. The pallet fork drops into and lifts out of the wheel's teeth in turn, and the wheel nudges the fork back to keep the balance swinging.
- Locking: one pallet of the fork catches a wheel tooth and the wheel stops
- Unlocking: the balance swing rotates the fork, the tooth is freed, the wheel steps forward
- Impulse: the wheel tooth gives the fork a small push so the swing continues
The ticking you hear is exactly this lock and release cycle.
Why it is the gateway to timekeeping
The escape wheel divides the uneven power coming off the gear train into equal portions you can count. The same logic sits inside many Japanese calibers; for background, read our guide to the best Japanese watches.
Examples
The ticking you hear when you hold a mechanical Seiko 5 Sports to your ear is the escape wheel being locked and released by the pallet fork several times a second.
View this watchIn an automatic dive watch such as the Orient Mako 3, the caliber behind the dial passes its power to the hands through this very escape wheel.
View this watch
Comparison
The escape wheel and the pallet fork work closely together but do different jobs.
| Option A | Option B | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Escape wheel | Pallet fork | The wheel carries power from the gear train and turns; the fork locks and releases that wheel to govern the swing. |
Related terms
Watches that show this
Frequently asked questions
What does the escape wheel do?
The escape wheel breaks the mainspring's continuous power into regular steps. The pallet fork locks and releases it on every beat, so the gear train cannot empty at once and the hands advance at a steady rate.
Is the escape wheel the same as the escapement?
No. The escapement is the whole mechanism, taking in the wheel, the pallet fork and the balance together. The escape wheel is just one part of it, the toothed wheel that passes power from the gear train to the fork.
Does the escape wheel make the ticking sound?
Yes. The tick you hear comes from the pallet fork locking and releasing the teeth of the escape wheel. This cycle repeats several times a second and gives a mechanical watch its familiar sound.